@@icepick859 From wikipedia; "From 1974 until 1985, Van Halen consisted of Eddie Van Halen; Eddie's brother, drummer Alex Van Halen; vocalist David Lee Roth; and bassist Michael Anthony." So if it wasn't Michael, who was it?
Not really a ridiculous take. Their debut album is arguably their best with three of their top 5 songs in- Eruption, you really got me, and ain’t talking bout love. They really came out of the gate swinging and only got better.
Yeah they were already amazing musicians in the early days when they did cover songs. Over the years they got more polished and by the time they recorded their debut album they were a well oiled machine. Look at I'm The One from 1976 and compare it to the Whiskey A Go Go 1977 show, they still got it but definitely better in 77 right before the album
Except for that up-tempo beat, yuuuuuck! Ya had to figure someone advised them to play it that way. Some slime, like Gene Simmons or even Dave himself.
@@RandyB199 His passing gave me a kick up the backside and inspired me to stop being a lazy at home acoustic player and get back into rocking it with an electric, amp and finding my own "Brown sound."
The brown sound is what Eddie called Alex's snare. He said "It sounds like he's beating on a log.". For some reason it became known as Eddie's sound. Eddie said it in an old interview. It's out there.
@@jamesbeason9256 you are correct sir. the kicker being that Alex started out playing guitar and Ed on drums but then Alex would always find Ed noodling on his guitar when he would get home so he said fuck it i'll play your drums and see how you like it! best revenge ever since it gave us the mighty Van Halen. I remember reading an interview with Ed where he says that he always loved how dirty Alex's snare sounded, like "molasses". so he tried whatever he could to make his guitar sound just like that snare. Thats what I always loved about Eddie's style and personality. He never got into it for the fame, he just LOVED music. It made me realize when I started playing guitar years ago that instead of focusing on seeing how fast i could play notes that i should pay more attention to the nuance of my tone and techniques. And the more i carefully listened to EVH the more i started to understand this. I never learned to play songs like "eruption" note for note but i learned how to play them and sound like MYSELF.
Kouki Munster that is NOT what happened, Eddie went out doing his paper route to pay for his drums & he caught Alex playing them & he got really good & Eddie IS the one who said fuck it, you play drums.
I saw an interview with Steve Via and he said that Eddie was visiting him at his home studio playing around with Vai's personal gear and he was shocked that he *still* sounded like EVH despite the different equipment. His sound was definitely his own unique voice.
Theres a great little similar instance and the video is on YT. Phish was playing at Farm Aid (99?) and Neil Young comes out to join them to the surpise of the band. Play Down By the River, and Neil is using Trey’s backup guitar and playing through Trey’s rig. He sounded basically exactly the same as he does playing through his own gear. Also apparently the guys from Phish asked Neil if he would play Powderfinger with them beforehand. He said he ‘doesn’t play that stuff anymore’ and then proceeded to play that song in his own solo set lmao. I guess he liked their playing enough to join them afterall.
Picked up my 10 year son from his baseball practice today - had the radio on, he says to me, "Dad, I like the old songs you listen to, better than today's music." I just smiled and turned the radio up.
My 11 year old has said the exact same thing to me. Sad this generation doesn't really have decent music they can be passionate about... but glad my boy has good taste.
that is literally the truth for me. army ait training, and i was listening to everything van halen on my walk man ha. And the album 1984 still reminds me of ft bragg. i was humming this song while patrolling thru the woods all night on cold winter nights
Yeah, I agree, no chance, the guitar player is mediocre and the lead singer seems a little dull, and boring. Seems he lacks confidence and self esteem...oh well, maybe they could go into accounting or something.
But every song on those albums aren't "great". Eliminate EVH's style and they are plain. So then you say, well he's part of the whole. Yes, but without him they go no where. VH were good in their time. EVH brought back the guitar hero to rock which was important at the start of disco and electronic music.
The value of Michael Anthony cannot be overstated. DLR entertains the crowd, and Michael strengthens the melody where David misses notes due to leaping around. Eddie and Alex also sound terrific, very assured. A winning combination.
Why do people always forget that Eddie was 50% of that backup vocal sound? I keep seeing ridiculous comments like “The Band wouldn’t have gotten famous without Mike” and “Mike was the sound of VH!” He added nice harmonies with Eddie and played simple bass lines. I’ve played with dozens of bass players who could easily have done what Michael did.
@@KevyNova So what are all these better Bass players doing now or even then? Working in the restaurant or construction Biz? Yeah, That's what I thought.. LOL..
@@finscreenname Their is no such thing as Van Halen without DLR. Eddie would have eventually been known but the band Van Halen would never have happen without DLR.
..and Plymouth Fury coupes with 440's. In fact, I have one for a summer daily, rn in Wisc. Kind of in Rat Rod condition, but sweet sounding & oh so much fun :) Plenty of Corona & VH helped in getting her sea worthy, once more after a 23 yr hibernation. #furyvanwinkle on Insta.
Glad you appreciate amazing music. I first heard this song in an old camaro with 6X9 Jensen speakers, cranked to the max. 8 track tape too. We left the car saying, WTF did we just hear! They changed music forever!
Coming from a 55-year-old man who fell in love with Van Halen in 1980. I appreciate that. In my junior high pics all my school pictures have me with a giant Eddie Van Halen pin on my shirt lol. Those were great times! It was like an event each time a vinyl record or a cassette tape came out. Everybody got together and shared their expressions and thoughts about the songs on the new albums! Kids don't do that anymore!
@@dansmith8912same age, same opinion...I remember the first time I heard the radio plays of the first album...I discovered VH and KISS in the same year....blew my mind.
alagogo ok you obviously don’t know anything about Eddie Van Halen. This dude you are listening to right now is one of the best guitar players of all time
@ clubredken...... Actually, What Huey Lewis had said was, "Sorry boys, you're just too darn loud... Plus, if you made it BIG, Might as well face it, You'll be Addicted to Drugs!!"
@Pete Lucchini I can definitely understand that. I loved Van Halen from their first album all the way to 1984. I went to the 1984 tour in Atlanta Georgia and am still glad that I got to see them before they broke up. However..... It was the worst damned concert that I've ever been to in my life and I've been to a lot shows over the years. Hey.....I read your post again. You saw their first tour........and I saw their last tour. I still listen to their old stuff.
@@robgeorgia8801 I also saw their first tour. With Sammy. 5150 tour. At BC Place in Vancouver '86. A highlight was Sammy running up to the catwalks above the stage and hanging off it with one hand. I'm scared of heights so I pretty much crapped myself. I was a big hit with my buddies on the 2 hr. drive home.
@Pete Lucchini I saw them in '81 during their "prime" years and DLR was stinkin' drunk. I was still a punk kid, but I saw Rush two weeks before and they CRUSHED it. Needless to say, at the time, VH was a disappointment, and Rush was so good, I stopped going to concerts for awhile. TBF Eddie still annihilated...so that was cool.
Was that the band Steve soboleski put together? Mark Anthony is little brother .... Saw them a couple times I thought they were great but Steve seem to be under his brothers Shadow
As outstanding as this is, this is a great example of how important the right producer is. Ted Templeman heard this and said: 'Really cool tune, guys - what if we tried pulling the tempo back a bit?' And the rest is history...
100%. Ted doesn't get nearly enough accolades for his contributions to VH. As cosmically awesome as Eddie is/was, Ted's work recording and focusing Eddie (and Roth!) on the Roth-era albums... was invaluable. Fair Warning, I, and 1984, especially, as those 3 albums are all-time top 20.
That guitar tone just kills me. My brother went to see them at a local show before the first album was released. He said "Man, you gotta hear these guys".
Saw them as opening act for Black Sabbath in August of '78 and even as a young teen it was clear this band was going straight upward. I'll never forget seeing Eddie do Eruption that time, it is burned in my mind. It was a small general admission venue and we were very close to the stage. I was a big fan of Sabbath and the old guard having mostly older friends (who corrupted me at an early age :)) and was there for the Sabs and had not yet heard VH...i bought the album the next day!! I saw them on their following headlining tours, what great shows!
I remember being a kid and hearing their album when it first came out. All of my friends used to go to one of their houses and listen to it and others because their father had a great stereo with big speakers. Great days back then for sure.
Ah yes, I’d go to my buddy Bruno’s mom’s house and we’d listen to it on a reel to reel through a stereo system that took up an entire wall. And that system earned every inch of space it took up. 🤘 Now we get weird little Bluetooth speakers that fit in our pockets. 🫤
I heard Running with the Devil when they played in my den in July 1976 at my sister's high school graduation party in Hawthorne CA. What a party! There were 4 people found passed out in the backyard the next morning. My sister refused to See VH when they hit it big as she had seen then dozens of times at backyard parties!! In the same house 5 years later, a friend of my roommates brought over a band mate when she was a groupie for Motley Crue. Yes, there was Tommy Lee... thin, no name punk, at the time playing the Starwood In Hollywood. I did not see Motley at the Starwood, but saw Quiet Riot there before they hit it big. Also saw Sammy Hagar at Pasadena High School Auditorium back in the day before Can't Drive 55 was out. Those were the great High School Days in Southern California.
Great story, thank you! I remember skate boarding on the boardwalk at mission beach, SD 1979. This was when guys could pull up in their vans open the back doors and play music for the whole beach. This one van started playing running with the devil album and I'm like "who in the F* is this band" I sat there and listened to the whole album. I remember it vividly. RIP EVH
@@jordin7091. It is common knowledge they played ALOT around SoCal coming up. Eddie always joked they were a "10 year overnight sensation". They did alot of small backyard gigs.....
Before Ted Templeman, I never paid attention to the producers. When Ted left VH, the next album I said, "What changed?". Ted's the man. I mean in the beginning, he took basically the same sound we've heard from the Simmons Demo, Zero, and made VH1; One of the greatest rock albums of all time.
I remember back yard kegger parties in general. If you drove around, listened, and looked long enough, you would usually find one. There was also muscle-car cruising on whatever blvd. ...yes, much has changed.
@@Lengsel7 every kegger we tried to throw, and this was about 15 years ago ended up either in a huge fight or the person that owned the house getting ripped off. Seems like people weren't as shady in the 70's - 80's when it came to that sort of thing.
@@guitarofdestiny all of southern California was like that back then , from New Port to Big Bear ,,you never new who'd u see playing at parties especially if u hung out up in LA or the valley ,, leather wolf ,, motley crue ,, RHC all before they were anybody ,, great days
@@KevyNova Dave is the only reason it did in all honesty. Throughout all the BS Ed more or less admits that he was happy covering songs and having a real job and Dave made them take the VH name, all the goofy visual stuff, and most importantly the insistence on all original tunes.
Roth knew it. He and the dudes knew they had something. And they did it. Never stop believing in your music. Even if the world is plagued by tastes that differ your own
I'm really impressed with the quality of this recording considering it's the first known live version. You think about the recording equipment available back then to what was a small band at the time. And the fact that it had to be magnetic media which degrades over time.
A lot of degradation depends on the type and brand of magnetic media that was used originally to make this recording. If expensive chrome or metal tape was used as is used in most studio recordings, then it would have most likely survived the degradation issues. However, it normal bias tape like TDK or Maxell tape had been used, the there would have been some degradation, which came usually be cleaned up digitally. However, if some bargain brand tape like those three for a dollar Certrons, or the private label blue ones you used to find in Kmart's had been used, the forget about it. But regardless or brand or type of tape that was used, literately all tape suffers from sticky shed syndrome where it will stick to the heads when played back, especially as it sits up for a while, doesn't get played, and moisture builds up in it. That's when you have to bake it in a convection oven at 140 degrees Fahrenheit before attempting any playback. This usually works for about 30 days, but it gives the listener enough time to either make a safety copy or transfer it to digital.
Storage conditions are a major factor too. A cool and dry environment is ideal, if I'm not mistaken. Regardless, climate control catered to the materials being stored can make a huge difference. I think also, since this is a likely a soundboard recording, the tape was a home cassette tape straight off the live mixing board, and not a large reel to reel, studio master type tape. I think cassettes tend to last a long time, maybe even longer than the larger format studio grade tape. My dad has cassettes he made in the early 70's that still play perfect today, probably because they've been inside, in a cool, dry, air conditioned house most of the time. I'm not surprised if the original source tape survived intact all these years.
Van Halen 1 is the best debut album ever. I remember walking onto my HS campus my freshman year and hearing somebody’s boom box blasting this guitar solo that sounded like angels. I had to find out what/who that was. It turned out to be Eruption and Eddie Van Halen. I have never been the same since.
blown away how much eddy still sounds like him. his tone is clearly all in his playing. no matter what rig he has or how it’s even recorded he still has his signature sound. it’s crazy that he sounded that good in the 70’s.
Well that and the fact he was largely using the same equipment. There's a reason Eddie never sounded quite the same from the 90s onward, and it's without question because all his gear changed.
@@MisterSwagify that's definitely true, but there's a great story (rock folklore) about one time when VH was first getting big and people were all talking about Eddie, Ted Nugent was saying it was all in Eddie's gear and anyone could do it. Well Ted eventually got a chance at a soundcheck to play Eddie's full concert setup, about to prove anyone could play like him if they had his gear. He started playing, and to everyones surprise, he sounded exactly like Ted Nugent.
Nobody's guitar sounded like that when they came out.. EVH was the first to bring a lot techniques that are still used by all great rock guitarists today.. like it or not.. it's true.. Rock On Everyone..
1:08 This is actually Eddie’s “Frankenstrat”, before it was painted black and white and before he striped it up again and made it red. This is the guitar that he recorded most of Van Halen’s early songs with and if you watch the “Jump” video, this is the body of that guitar.
That's actually not the "Frankie", which was all black at first and had a maple fretboard, that's the Fender Strat he used before he built the famous Frankenstrat. Only the songs with tremolo dives on VH1 were recorded with the Frankie, he used the Ibanez Destroyer, from the cover of Women and Children First, for most of the first album.... before he took a chainsaw to it and ruined it.
ConstanceCox Well, you've got to admit that song was all fucked up. It was rushed, there was a lot of mistakes and that intro was terrible. The people that were there were used to listening to Frampton comes alive and hotel California and shit like that. Because it was so sloppy, some of those people probably thought it was "punk rock". And you know how long hair dirt merchant hippie SCUM HATED PUNK rock back then.
I agree, the timing is off, it speeds up and slows down in a few spots too ever so slightly; you can tell they were much less practiced back then. Interesting to see that Ed and Alex's timing wasn't always as impeccable They still got huge anyway though, so obviously they figured it out. I also notice Ed's tone in this sounds way more bassy, wonder if he's playing this on a Les Paul...
Eddie was 21 years old here, and had been playing guitar for, at most, a decade at this point. A sobering realization to those of us with many years of "not quitting my day job", hobby-type guitar playing who can't even fathom playing a solo like this or any of the blazing runs he could already drop on you effortlessly.
Not quitting my day job either. It took me a long time (decades) before I had a good selection of VH tunes in my repertoire. Exciting times when you can finally play VH hooks. Practice, practice, practice.
@@turolretar Exactly. There is always in the comments when someone is really good. Yeah he just has practiced so much that is why he is so good. There are alot of people that don't have the talent that would never reach that level by putting in the same work, and just as many hours..
@@stefanosantana ha! It does sound like a bucket, but when we remember what was used to record back in the day, it's almost like our ear adjusts or our minds forgive that stuff. Still funny!
Not to discredit anybody at all BUT...listening to this only proves how much of a genius Ted Templeman was. He really knew how to make a great band sound greater.
I was thinking exactly the same thing! VH's first few albums sounded so raw yet paradoxically so slickly produced! I don't know how to explain this contradiction other than to credit it to Ted's production!
Nathan McClellan , Don Landee as well. They did a phenomenal job in studio with them, as they never could duplicate their sound on stage! The Eagles, they are not! Lol
Saw them in 78 with Journey and Montrose. Looking back at that time nobody would've thought that Sammy Hagar from Montrose would be playing with Van Halen in the future, and that they would become THE band everyone wanted to be like
I also saw them in 78 in Nuremberg Germany. I was in eighth grade. My family was stationed in Germany at the time There were only about 200 people in the audience. Wow what a show. I still have the ticket stub.
Seen them in 81’ 2 nights in a row. Incredible, Vocals, backup vocals, Bass guitar, Rhythm and Lead guitar, and Drums. In addition to their personalities they brought the party to the stage. They made you feel like you were part of the band.
Holy Christ-when Eddle comes in with the arpeggio riffs section it's just smokin'! It totally transcends the quality of the recording almost---the master and his tone! Love it. It's still hitting me hard--we all miss you EVH------RIP!
In 1969-1970 Us Heavies from PHS used to hang out at Victory Park on the Mound in Pasadena (right below the tennis courts). Alex VH would hang with us and we would drink Red Mountain wine and groove. Eddie was too young and stayed at home. My girlfriend at the time Soo N. broke up with me to start dating little Edward. I miss those crazy days. Hope everyone survived.
Mike Btrfld This isn't about the mix. Any good musician can hear that the Alex and Mike weren't together at all and then Eddie comes in and locks that shit down. But this is their very early days, and of course, they eventually got it together to be a super tight band.
Doug Davis It wasn't Ed's cleanest but it's still light years ahead of what anyone else was doing at the time. And I like that the solo is twice as long as what was on the record.
So the recording quality sucks; the drums sound like crap and there's hardly any vocal. But there's clearly so much more polish to their sound and the composition than 99% of bands playing clubs today.
@@napsahtava Being right about Israel doesn't give him ethics. And comparing to others isn't what gives you ethics, either. There hasn't been a leader of a country in the history of the world who has been ethical. It's literally impossible to get to that level of power without being ethically compromised. But you keep on living in la la land, bud. Drink that kool-aid.
This sounds like what it is posted as. Small club with a Marshall for Eddie, distorted bass amp for Michael Anthony that didn't have enough power, Alex on basic drum kit, and David Lee Roth flubbing words. It was the 70's. How did this happen? Someone must have spiked the party punch. I can't imagine that this young rock band was intentionally intoxicated. This is great stuff actually.
@@earlcampbell8927 oh be real. Roth was the best rock frontman for any touring rock band from '79 to '84, and at the time, about five years was all a band like this could expect.
It's so crazy to me how this is 1976 when it sounds so out of place compared to everything else going on at the time... I never actually realized they had all these songs written in the mid-70s... and they were defining trends for the entire next decade through 92... most bands are derivative in that you can hear earlier bands in their sound, and so you know where they got their influence, but these guys are something else... like they took what was going on at that time and pushed it leaps and bounds further than most bands do...
My Dad use to tell me stories about seeing VH at a place called Walter Mittys Rock Emporium in Pomona California when he first started dating my mom. He told me that he use to come home and tell my mom “I don’t think those guys will ever make it out of their garage but that guitar player might do something” well I was born two week before VH album came out. My mom was listening to the radio and “Running with the Devil” came on after the song played my called my dad at work and asked home “Do you remember that band that you thought wouldn’t make it out of their garage?” My dad replied “Yes I do.” My mom told my dad “Well they have a song on the radio called Running with the Devil, I think that band is going to blow up” well all of us VH fans know how their career turned out and how great EVH was. I personally am thankful for the funny cool stories my dad use to share with me and I am grateful I caught Van Hagar in 2004 and Van Roth in 2012.
IMHO... Dave sings the same as now lol.. amazing raw Eddie guitar with solos and fills to match.. Michael Anthony's vocals awesome.. stripped back drums from Alex.. serious GEM.. thanks for uploading.. any more for any more....??
I love michael anthonys voice and bass. But the van halen sound? You must have some bias against Dave to make such a foolish statement. Dont like Dave. That's ok. But i got no time in my life for such negativity. Now pass me the bong and have a nice fat line ready for me after that
Damn I wish this was true. I run long distances with a group and we exchange trivia questions every mile. This would have been a great trivia question.
@@kernelfactory7839 How about this? The Van Halen's were a musical family from Europe. Eddie and Alex played classical music all the way across the Atlantic to pay for their fare. When they got here, their father realized there was no work for traditional musicians in America. So, he bought his sons two new instruments. Eddie originally was given a drum set by his parents, and Alex got the guitar. One day Eddie came home, and Alex was banging away on his drums, so he picked up Alex's guitar. The rest is history.
I was just a Senior in High school when this Album dropped like in the summer of 78? It blew everyone away with the songs and eruption. Every music fan was arguing what kinds of effects , Eddie used to make eruption and Eruption was the most played High School Graduation songs for years to come. This album and Panama were the best for me and then Sammy hagar dropped 5150 in 1985 and that was a musical match made in heaven!.
I have to agree with other commenters: these guys will never amount to anything. One and done garage band. Their equipment will be pawned for drinking money.
*Funny there. A friend of mine told this story. He was from an affluent family in Hollywood California. He was an Olympic hopeful swimmer but , turned to music instead by learning to play drums. Spoiled rich kids wanting to be musicians and rock stars, were gifted expensive guitars, amps, and other equipment, only to be sold at pawn shops after realizing they have no Talent.*
It’s been said a hundred times already... but damn! The most envied and sought after tone on the planet - by an unheard of kid playing in a club! Unbelievable!!
Saw VH open for Journey on VH's first big tour as an opening band. Must have been 1978, 1979; somewhere right in there. After VH left the stage so, did about half the crowd. LOL No one wanted to see Journey after that over the top performance by VH. haha
Saw them at MSG in NY in 1981 - loudest band I ever saw! Opened with “Unchained” - blew the roof off the Garden.... girls up front taking their tops and bras off and throwing them onstage... crazy...
Interesting to hear the lyrics weren't quite "finalized". Those things happen all the time. Songs get written, performed live & minor changes get made either before or while you're in the studio. It's too bad there isn't more video of these live performances.
That guitar sound as we know it comes from a small box known as a Echoplex! I held Eddie's Echoplex while it was in for service in a small repair shop in Tarzana, California 1978.
@@mikeholmes3530 I have all the old effects and processors that UAD makes in my computer. I think about 85 UAD plugins with 24 dedicated processors to run them. I have as many instances as I need of millions of dollars worth of equipment without having to pay for the originals, having to have a place to store them, and without having to maintain them. Counting VST plugins, I probably have over 500. I really like the UAD Roland Dimention D and the EMT 140. Just got the Capitol Chambers reverb. Really looking forward to singing with that.
@@midi510 I have the same UAD stuff for Protools, But my EMT 140 (Yes, a real plate reverb) has some mojo the the UAD doesn't. But I would not buy one after owning the UAD. It's just I had my EMT 140 back to the days of 16 track tape.
its amazing looking back at how important it was in those days to go with friends out to a club to see the "next big group" or hear a "new sound". It was like you and your friends discovered them. So many great shows.
That's because they were poor, weren't on coke & it was just the 4 of them trying to make it, of course they sounded like a well oil machine. When the money, drugs, alcohol & hangers on crept in years later, that's when things got out of control and the band trying to hang on
Dave said it would be on the radio soon but it is not the album version or the later live version. Sounds like it was made after they had signed their contract but before or just immediately after the recording sessions. Either way, the complete sound hadn't gelled into the live version yet. Could possibly have been a professional attempt at getting a sound for A&R to send around to prospective labels as well?
Michael Anthony never got enough credit. His vocals were essential to the VH sound.
Agreed. That high voice.
Too bad that wasn't michael anthony
@@icepick859 From wikipedia; "From 1974 until 1985, Van Halen consisted of Eddie Van Halen; Eddie's brother, drummer Alex Van Halen; vocalist David Lee Roth; and bassist Michael Anthony." So if it wasn't Michael, who was it?
@@pauls5096 It's unmistakably Michael Anthony. No doubt.
Amen! One of the best vocals in any band. His background vocals made van halen
I know it sounds ridiculous but these guys seemed to have come out fully formed..just a truly magic band.
Not really a ridiculous take. Their debut album is arguably their best with three of their top 5 songs in- Eruption, you really got me, and ain’t talking bout love. They really came out of the gate swinging and only got better.
Yeah they were already amazing musicians in the early days when they did cover songs. Over the years they got more polished and by the time they recorded their debut album they were a well oiled machine. Look at I'm The One from 1976 and compare it to the Whiskey A Go Go 1977 show, they still got it but definitely better in 77 right before the album
@@tylerburcham9964 You Really Got Me = The Kinks
Except for that up-tempo beat, yuuuuuck! Ya had to figure someone advised them to play it that way. Some slime, like Gene Simmons or even Dave himself.
@@Fearzero As does Where Have the Good Times Gone.
Eddie always smiled when he was playing, you can see the joy that playing guitar brought him.
Yes, and that is infectious. He was awesome.
@@RandyB199 His passing gave me a kick up the backside and inspired me to stop being a lazy at home acoustic player and get back into rocking it with an electric, amp and finding my own "Brown sound."
If you could play like that, you'd smile too 😊
He has also said he was drunk most of the time when performing.
@@AndyK.23 Well that'll make you smile!
damn even a shitty recording eddie's brown sound is there , it sounds like Alex is pounding on empty paint cans but damn eddie's guitar rips
Creme always rises to the top. Eddies was a human guitar.
The brown sound is what Eddie called Alex's snare. He said "It sounds like he's beating on a log.".
For some reason it became known as Eddie's sound.
Eddie said it in an old interview. It's out there.
@@jamesbeason9256 you are correct sir. the kicker being that Alex started out playing guitar and Ed on drums but then Alex would always find Ed noodling on his guitar when he would get home so he said fuck it i'll play your drums and see how you like it! best revenge ever since it gave us the mighty Van Halen. I remember reading an interview with Ed where he says that he always loved how dirty Alex's snare sounded, like "molasses". so he tried whatever he could to make his guitar sound just like that snare. Thats what I always loved about Eddie's style and personality. He never got into it for the fame, he just LOVED music. It made me realize when I started playing guitar years ago that instead of focusing on seeing how fast i could play notes that i should pay more attention to the nuance of my tone and techniques. And the more i carefully listened to EVH the more i started to understand this. I never learned to play songs like "eruption" note for note but i learned how to play them and sound like MYSELF.
Did he really play a Strat on this?
Kouki Munster that is NOT what happened, Eddie went out doing his paper route to pay for his drums & he caught Alex playing them & he got really good & Eddie IS the one who said fuck it, you play drums.
Dang. Eddie had his sound down even back in the day.
Makes sense. Your sound is mostly in your fingers.
I saw an interview with Steve Via and he said that Eddie was visiting him at his home studio playing around with Vai's personal gear and he was shocked that he *still* sounded like EVH despite the different equipment. His sound was definitely his own unique voice.
Theres a great little similar instance and the video is on YT. Phish was playing at Farm Aid (99?) and Neil Young comes out to join them to the surpise of the band. Play Down By the River, and Neil is using Trey’s backup guitar and playing through Trey’s rig. He sounded basically exactly the same as he does playing through his own gear.
Also apparently the guys from Phish asked Neil if he would play Powderfinger with them beforehand. He said he ‘doesn’t play that stuff anymore’ and then proceeded to play that song in his own solo set lmao. I guess he liked their playing enough to join them afterall.
His Sound is his Sound it's not gonna change because they signed a record contract
Know kidding...right. wow!
Picked up my 10 year son from his baseball practice today - had the radio on, he says to me, "Dad, I like the old songs you listen to, better than today's music." I just smiled and turned the radio up.
My kids were that way too.
Yup. My 2 kids cut their teeth on classic rock!!
are you surprised?
Good kid!!
My 11 year old has said the exact same thing to me. Sad this generation doesn't really have decent music they can be passionate about... but glad my boy has good taste.
“I guess you guys ain’t ready for that yet. But your kids are gonna love em”
Eddies solo in BTTFu. Youll love my friends song.
He was born in 1955. Coincidence?
Back to the future, playing that guitar at the high school dance.
"Enchantment Under the Sea"
Michael J fox once said that I think?
RIP Eddie. You provided the soundtrack for our lives
Did he ever. We listened to so much Van Halen in early 80's
that is literally the truth for me. army ait training, and i was listening to everything van halen on my walk man ha. And the album 1984 still reminds me of ft bragg. i was humming this song while patrolling thru the woods all night on cold winter nights
At Bragg our 2/504 BN Commander would blast this on loudspeakers for PT the morning of payday activities. This was in 04.
Rest In Sound Eddie.
Eddie is just better at guitar than all the rest of us, ever.
He made you either want to take up guitar, or quit guitar.
he stands alone
You guys are def
Don't forget Allan Holdsworth.
@@AudioStorm1980 Yet you're here listening to eddie. Lol. You're aren't very bright
This is Van Halen in their rawest purest form. Love it.
Gee......you think????? Great observation....SMH!!?!?
Sounds grrrrrrreat!
@@tauras665 dang bruh
These guys will never make it.
Yeah, I agree, no chance, the guitar player is mediocre and the lead singer seems a little dull, and boring. Seems he lacks confidence and self esteem...oh well, maybe they could go into accounting or something.
Maybe they need a different lead singer...
totally need the guitarist from Joan jett
Singer is a jim dandy clone!
The four stages of fame:
1- "Who are you?"
2- "Get me Van Halen! "
3- "Get me someone like Van Halen. "
4- "Who are you? "
Van Halens first two albums were unbeatable 🤘👍
Highway To Hell & Back In Black are better than the second VH album. And I'd but Back In Black right next to VH 1.
First 4 albums can be played front to back, non-stop
@@adrianmclaughlin9585 those crickets you're hearing? People who agree.
First three at the very least - Women & Children First is top notch.
But every song on those albums aren't "great". Eliminate EVH's style and they are plain. So then you say, well he's part of the whole. Yes, but without him they go no where. VH were good in their time. EVH brought back the guitar hero to rock which was important at the start of disco and electronic music.
The value of Michael Anthony cannot be overstated.
DLR entertains the crowd, and Michael strengthens the melody where David misses notes due to leaping around.
Eddie and Alex also sound terrific, very assured.
A winning combination.
Alex sounds like he has a very small drum kit. Without Mike VH would not have been VH.
Why do people always forget that Eddie was 50% of that backup vocal sound? I keep seeing ridiculous comments like “The Band wouldn’t have gotten famous without Mike” and “Mike was the sound of VH!” He added nice harmonies with Eddie and played simple bass lines. I’ve played with dozens of bass players who could easily have done what Michael did.
Give it up for "Sauce" Soblewski!
@@KevyNova So what are all these better Bass players doing now or even then? Working in the restaurant or construction Biz? Yeah, That's what I thought.. LOL..
@@finscreenname Their is no such thing as Van Halen without DLR.
Eddie would have eventually been known but the band Van Halen would never have happen without DLR.
Friends used to work on their Camaros, novas, and mustangs, on their driveways, with their buddies, while drinking beer and cranking up the radio.
Some of us still do
My older sister's boyfriends...every.single.damn.one.
..and Plymouth Fury coupes with 440's.
In fact, I have one for a summer daily, rn in Wisc.
Kind of in Rat Rod condition, but sweet sounding & oh so much fun :)
Plenty of Corona & VH helped in getting her
sea worthy, once more after a 23 yr hibernation.
#furyvanwinkle on Insta.
How cool would vids of that be ? Passing the oldschool lefthander around drinking some brewskies .
@@daviswendye ha ha ha ha :)
I’m 33 but always been obsessed with this song. Van Halen was a super team of musicians absolutely perfect
I was 19 when this came out....I ran out a got the cassette. This might be the best song on that album.
Glad you appreciate amazing music. I first heard this song in an old camaro with 6X9 Jensen speakers, cranked to the max. 8 track tape too. We left the car saying, WTF did we just hear! They changed music forever!
Coming from a 55-year-old man who fell in love with Van Halen in 1980.
I appreciate that.
In my junior high pics all my school pictures have me with a giant Eddie Van Halen pin on my shirt lol.
Those were great times!
It was like an event each time a vinyl record or a cassette tape came out.
Everybody got together and shared their expressions and thoughts about the songs on the new albums!
Kids don't do that anymore!
@@dansmith8912same age, same opinion...I remember the first time I heard the radio plays of the first album...I discovered VH and KISS in the same year....blew my mind.
65. Born 59.
I heard all of these phantastisc Bands. All! ❤
Michael Anthony’s backing vocals really stand out here
Just not a true VH sound without him!!
No Mike no van Halen.
Anthony made the vocals in this band. Doesn't matter what Eddie says.
They should get rid of Eddie's son and bring back Michael Anthony
You might want to remind Eddie of that, poor guy gets no respect
The guitar player is decent, he could probably have a career in music if he practiced every day .
alagogo ok you obviously don’t know anything about Eddie Van Halen. This dude you are listening to right now is one of the best guitar players of all time
@@patroche550 r/whooooosh
Whoosh!
@Cobb Knobbler It didn't go over his head. His reply went over everyone's head
Its hard to be sarcastic in a message
Cobb Knobbler haha ehat do you mean
After this song, Huey Lewis stood up and said ..'Sorry boys, you're just too darn loud.'
@ clubredken...... Actually, What Huey Lewis had said was, "Sorry boys, you're just too darn loud... Plus, if you made it BIG, Might as well face it, You'll be Addicted to Drugs!!"
@Pete Lucchini
I can definitely understand that. I loved Van Halen from their first album all the way to 1984.
I went to the 1984 tour in Atlanta Georgia and am still glad that I got to see them before they broke up.
However..... It was the worst damned concert that I've ever been to in my life and I've been to a lot shows over the years.
Hey.....I read your post again.
You saw their first tour........and I saw their last tour.
I still listen to their old stuff.
Legendary
@@robgeorgia8801 I also saw their first tour. With Sammy. 5150 tour.
At BC Place in Vancouver '86.
A highlight was Sammy running up to the catwalks above the stage and hanging off it with one hand.
I'm scared of heights so I pretty much crapped myself. I was a big hit with my buddies on the 2 hr. drive home.
@Pete Lucchini I saw them in '81 during their "prime" years and DLR was stinkin' drunk. I was still a punk kid, but I saw Rush two weeks before and they CRUSHED it.
Needless to say, at the time, VH was a disappointment, and Rush was so good, I stopped going to concerts for awhile.
TBF Eddie still annihilated...so that was cool.
Being a kid in the 70's was just awesome. The music was great and the risks that came with adventure were real. So lucky to have experienced the 70's.
Amen brother!!
don't forget the cartoos!!
Agreed,we had it made and didn't know it 😂
You mean STD's ?
Agreed. I was in the 7th grade when Van Halen arrived. Still my favorite decade of music to listen to.
The band was called "Mammoth" back in the day , saw them at a backyard party in Pasadena Ca in mid 1970s , They were awesome and I was so young😎
Was that the band Steve soboleski put together? Mark Anthony is little brother .... Saw them a couple times I thought they were great but Steve seem to be under his brothers Shadow
They were Mammoth from 1972 until 1974 with a different bassist and then changed their name to Van Halen when Michael Anthony joined the band in 1974.
Eddies first band was broken combs.
DiamondIce 321 yeah but Mammoth was the name of this band before the name change to Van Halen
super envious
As outstanding as this is, this is a great example of how important the right producer is. Ted Templeman heard this and said: 'Really cool tune, guys - what if we tried pulling the tempo back a bit?' And the rest is history...
Ted Templeton was the MAN. He knew exactly what rock should sound like
100%. Ted doesn't get nearly enough accolades for his contributions to VH. As cosmically awesome as Eddie is/was, Ted's work recording and focusing Eddie (and Roth!) on the Roth-era albums... was invaluable. Fair Warning, I, and 1984, especially, as those 3 albums are all-time top 20.
They were playing it slower before they met Ted. Check out the Gene Simmons demo (or VH Zero) from 1976
@@jamesmiller6217 yeah, every band plays faster on stage than in the studio.
Less disco lol
That guitar tone just kills me. My brother went to see them at a local show before the first album was released. He said "Man, you gotta hear these guys".
Echoplex into a Marshall just kills it
Saw them as opening act for Black Sabbath in August of '78 and even as a young teen it was clear this band was going straight upward. I'll never forget seeing Eddie do Eruption that time, it is burned in my mind. It was a small general admission venue and we were very close to the stage. I was a big fan of Sabbath and the old guard having mostly older friends (who corrupted me at an early age :)) and was there for the Sabs and had not yet heard VH...i bought the album the next day!! I saw them on their following headlining tours, what great shows!
Ain't really nothing like a Marshall plexi
@@mikeimmonen6619 aint really nothing like a Marshall period
@@sam8404 Precisely
I remember being a kid and hearing their album when it first came out. All of my friends used to go to one of their houses and listen to it and others because their father had a great stereo with big speakers. Great days back then for sure.
Ah yes, I’d go to my buddy Bruno’s mom’s house and we’d listen to it on a reel to reel through a stereo system that took up an entire wall. And that system earned every inch of space it took up. 🤘 Now we get weird little Bluetooth speakers that fit in our pockets. 🫤
I heard Running with the Devil when they played in my den in July 1976 at my sister's high school graduation party in Hawthorne CA. What a party! There were 4 people found passed out in the backyard the next morning. My sister refused to See VH when they hit it big as she had seen then dozens of times at backyard parties!! In the same house 5 years later, a friend of my roommates brought over a band mate when she was a groupie for Motley Crue. Yes, there was Tommy Lee... thin, no name punk, at the time playing the Starwood In Hollywood. I did not see Motley at the Starwood, but saw Quiet Riot there before they hit it big. Also saw Sammy Hagar at Pasadena High School Auditorium back in the day before Can't Drive 55 was out. Those were the great High School Days in Southern California.
Yeah sure you did.Prove it.Pics vids etc??
Great story! Thanks for sharing!
@@ZCAR355 And you believe it?
Great story, thank you! I remember skate boarding on the boardwalk at mission beach, SD 1979. This was when guys could pull up in their vans open the back doors and play music for the whole beach. This one van started playing running with the devil album and I'm like "who in the F* is this band" I sat there and listened to the whole album. I remember it vividly. RIP EVH
@@jordin7091. It is common knowledge they played ALOT around SoCal coming up. Eddie always joked they were a "10 year overnight sensation". They did alot of small backyard gigs.....
Damn Michael Anthony was already so on point with those backing vocals!!!
Secret weapon of that band
@Kevin Prima lol. Mike taught Eddie how to not sing.
Kevin Prima not true
Your born with it. Or you are not. Trust me.
Now according to Eddie, it was he in fact that was the soulful harmonies present in this band! Wtf ever!
It's pretty good but it could use more cow bell.
Druuuuuuuuuugs
That's boc
Dam
More cowbell indeed
@MorbidManMusic But it's still funny. Ok if you have a joke go ahead... I'm listening. It better be fucking funny. :-).
Geez, Al's Snare sounds like a coconut.
BWaaaahaaaahaaaa! that's great.
Always has, never turns on the 'snare'. Bonk, bonk, bonk...
kelapa
Brown sound.
I agree that's unusual.
Ted TempleMAN. He was THE MAN behind the boards in the studio. R.I.P. Eddie!
Absolutely agree!!
Before Ted Templeman, I never paid attention to the producers. When Ted left VH, the next album I said, "What changed?". Ted's the man. I mean in the beginning, he took basically the same sound we've heard from the Simmons Demo, Zero, and made VH1; One of the greatest rock albums of all time.
@@Mr25thfret agreed. 5150 sounded sloppy compared to Ted Templeman’s sound.
i can remember back yard kegger parties with VH playing ,, growing up in Southern California in the 70s and 80s a special thing ,, much has changed
What a time and a place that must have been. Totally incredible my friend
Loved the keg parties with a band. I would always stop on the way and get a xl soda cup for my beer. They probably went away for for legal reasons.
I remember back yard kegger parties in general. If you drove around, listened, and looked long enough, you would usually find one. There was also muscle-car cruising on whatever blvd. ...yes, much has changed.
@@Lengsel7 every kegger we tried to throw, and this was about 15 years ago ended up either in a huge fight or the person that owned the house getting ripped off. Seems like people weren't as shady in the 70's - 80's when it came to that sort of thing.
@@guitarofdestiny all of southern California was like that back then , from New Port to Big Bear ,,you never new who'd u see playing at parties especially if u hung out up in LA or the valley ,, leather wolf ,, motley crue ,, RHC all before they were anybody ,, great days
Probably in the top three most recognizable Van Halen songs. I don't think they had a clue what a monster this would become. RIP Eddie
Dave knew. He said “You’re Gonna hear this song on the radio!”
@@KevyNova Dave is the only reason it did in all honesty. Throughout all the BS Ed more or less admits that he was happy covering songs and having a real job and Dave made them take the VH name, all the goofy visual stuff, and most importantly the insistence on all original tunes.
Roth knew it. He and the dudes knew they had something. And they did it. Never stop believing in your music. Even if the world is plagued by tastes that differ your own
Anthony Tyler Kesterson : blah blah blah
I though that said testes. Lol!
Yea.. never stop believing in your music.. if its the late 70's..and your VanHalen..
If Devo can succeed, I guess ANYBODY can...
@@jamesholmberg3158 😂 I unfortunately remember them
I'm really impressed with the quality of this recording considering it's the first known live version. You think about the recording equipment available back then to what was a small band at the time. And the fact that it had to be magnetic media which degrades over time.
Right. Makes me wonder about the authenticity. I realize that it's without a doubt Van Halen. I'm not sure about it's age.
Scott are you kidding. Everybody pays big money to try to get old sounds now. Analog and tube. Not to mention it was prob cleaned up digitally
A lot of degradation depends on the type and brand of magnetic media that was used originally to make this recording. If expensive chrome or metal tape was used as is used in most studio recordings, then it would have most likely survived the degradation issues. However, it normal bias tape like TDK or Maxell tape had been used, the there would have been some degradation, which came usually be cleaned up digitally. However, if some bargain brand tape like those three for a dollar Certrons, or the private label blue ones you used to find in Kmart's had been used, the forget about it. But regardless or brand or type of tape that was used, literately all tape suffers from sticky shed syndrome where it will stick to the heads when played back, especially as it sits up for a while, doesn't get played, and moisture builds up in it. That's when you have to bake it in a convection oven at 140 degrees Fahrenheit before attempting any playback. This usually works for about 30 days, but it gives the listener enough time to either make a safety copy or transfer it to digital.
David Neil Gordon and?
Storage conditions are a major factor too. A cool and dry environment is ideal, if I'm not mistaken. Regardless, climate control catered to the materials being stored can make a huge difference.
I think also, since this is a likely a soundboard recording, the tape was a home cassette tape straight off the live mixing board, and not a large reel to reel, studio master type tape. I think cassettes tend to last a long time, maybe even longer than the larger format studio grade tape. My dad has cassettes he made in the early 70's that still play perfect today, probably because they've been inside, in a cool, dry, air conditioned house most of the time.
I'm not surprised if the original source tape survived intact all these years.
Van Halen 1 is the best debut album ever. I remember walking onto my HS campus my freshman year and hearing somebody’s boom box blasting this guitar solo that sounded like angels. I had to find out what/who that was. It turned out to be Eruption and Eddie Van Halen. I have never been the same since.
Hopefully, one day, these crazy kids will get a record deal.
Actually, they got a record contract but only with a lot of difficulty. Thank goodness they had enough determination.
At least put this demo on Bandcamp! Ya never know!
@@svenlindroos8830 I heard they gave up on music. They all work at Walmart.
I think with a little more practice might even be able to play at the school dance on Friday night. 😂
The deal they got after two records was sign up again and you will owe ten million dollars,, nice right
"a little something here that's going to be on the radio pretty soon..."
...with a few important "tweaks," here & there. ;)
I still cant believe Eddie is gone. RIP Eddie, you will always be the King!
blown away how much eddy still sounds like him. his tone is clearly all in his playing. no matter what rig he has or how it’s even recorded he still has his signature sound. it’s crazy that he sounded that good in the 70’s.
Well that and the fact he was largely using the same equipment. There's a reason Eddie never sounded quite the same from the 90s onward, and it's without question because all his gear changed.
@@MisterSwagify His early sound, especially 1978-1981, is the best rock sound I've ever heard.
@@MisterSwagify that's definitely true, but there's a great story (rock folklore) about one time when VH was first getting big and people were all talking about Eddie, Ted Nugent was saying it was all in Eddie's gear and anyone could do it. Well Ted eventually got a chance at a soundcheck to play Eddie's full concert setup, about to prove anyone could play like him if they had his gear. He started playing, and to everyones surprise, he sounded exactly like Ted Nugent.
The Brown sound
Nobody's guitar sounded like that when they came out.. EVH was the first to bring a lot techniques that are still used by all great rock guitarists today.. like it or not.. it's true.. Rock On Everyone..
way ahead of his time
Hell yeah, well said LW
1:08 This is actually Eddie’s “Frankenstrat”, before it was painted black and white and before he striped it up again and made it red. This is the guitar that he recorded most of Van Halen’s early songs with and if you watch the “Jump” video, this is the body of that guitar.
That's actually not the "Frankie", which was all black at first and had a maple fretboard, that's the Fender Strat he used before he built the famous Frankenstrat. Only the songs with tremolo dives on VH1 were recorded with the Frankie, he used the Ibanez Destroyer, from the cover of Women and Children First, for most of the first album.... before he took a chainsaw to it and ruined it.
Holy crap. Eds solo is the same one that made it on the multi platinum debut
...and the crowd goes mild.
ConstanceCox hehe !!
ConstanceCox
Well, you've got to admit that song was all fucked up.
It was rushed, there was a lot of mistakes and that intro was terrible. The people that were there were used to listening to Frampton comes alive and hotel California and shit like that. Because it was so sloppy, some of those people probably thought it was "punk rock". And you know how long hair dirt merchant hippie SCUM HATED PUNK rock back then.
it had the same effect on me.
I agree, the timing is off, it speeds up and slows down in a few spots too ever so slightly; you can tell they were much less practiced back then. Interesting to see that Ed and Alex's timing wasn't always as impeccable They still got huge anyway though, so obviously they figured it out. I also notice Ed's tone in this sounds way more bassy, wonder if he's playing this on a Les Paul...
Ha Ha" the crowd had no clue 🎸🎶🎵
Eddie was 21 years old here, and had been playing guitar for, at most, a decade at this point. A sobering realization to those of us with many years of "not quitting my day job", hobby-type guitar playing who can't even fathom playing a solo like this or any of the blazing runs he could already drop on you effortlessly.
It’s amazing what practice can achieve.
I read that while his brother and friends went to parties Eddie would stay at home grinding on guitar and it shows!
Not quitting my day job either. It took me a long time (decades) before I had a good selection of VH tunes in my repertoire. Exciting times when you can finally play VH hooks. Practice, practice, practice.
Talent is a thing ya know
@@turolretar Exactly. There is always in the comments when someone is really good. Yeah he just has practiced so much that is why he is so good. There are alot of people that don't have the talent that would never reach that level by putting in the same work, and just as many hours..
The 70's, what a time to be alive!.
Yes!....tube tops, Ditto jeans, Pink Floyd, And my best friend's older sister.Yes life was glorious in the seventies!
@@armoredsaint6639Are you sure you're not thinking about a rerun of "That 70s Show" that you watched on TV? 🤔
The first record of "drummer playing a bucket"
Hahaha...priceless
Are you old enough to understand why these older live recordings don't always sound great?
@@INKTALOVR1 no, I don't lol
@@stefanosantana ha! It does sound like a bucket, but when we remember what was used to record back in the day, it's almost like our ear adjusts or our minds forgive that stuff.
Still funny!
So true, Alex always loved this awful « bucket » sound. Even with the best producers in the biggest studios, his drumkits sounds like crap...
Back up vocals already solid in place.
who's doing them apart from anthony?
jonas jasinsky Ed.
+Steve Owens doesn't sound like him
Not to discredit anybody at all BUT...listening to this only proves how much of a genius Ted Templeman was. He really knew how to make a great band sound greater.
Couldn't agree more!!
I was thinking exactly the same thing! VH's first few albums sounded so raw yet paradoxically so slickly produced! I don't know how to explain this contradiction other than to credit it to Ted's production!
people dont realize their big songs were pretty much arranged for them
Nathan McClellan , Don Landee as well. They did a phenomenal job in studio with them, as they never could duplicate their sound on stage! The Eagles, they are not! Lol
I was just thinking the same thing...
I saw their first world tour in 1978, unreal is all I can say, no one could touch that sound back then!!
how about the blizzard or diary tour was that untouchable?
I saw them in Reno NV on that same tour. They where great! It's interesting to hear the different lyrics to this song but I'm glad they changed them.
Was at the Oakland show, they killed it🤘
Saw them in 78 with Journey and Montrose. Looking back at that time nobody would've thought that Sammy Hagar from Montrose would be playing with Van Halen in the future, and that they would become THE band everyone wanted to be like
I also saw them in 78 in Nuremberg Germany. I was in eighth grade. My family was stationed in Germany at the time There were only about 200 people in the audience. Wow what a show. I still have the ticket stub.
Seen them in 81’ 2 nights in a row. Incredible, Vocals, backup vocals, Bass guitar, Rhythm and Lead guitar, and Drums. In addition to their personalities they brought the party to the stage. They made you feel like you were part of the band.
Oh that’s awesome! Where abouts? :)
I saw II, Women Children First and Fair Warning tours in Chicago at the amphitheater when I was in H.S. I was so into VH!
Wow... This just shows how far ahead of the game they were way back then.
I wish I could personally thank Dave and Eddie for giving me much happiness. Those two genius's creations will live forever til the world implodes.
If you play Stairway to Heaven backwards, you get this song.....
Now that's funny.... I don't care who you are!
Satan breaks your needle...lol
Mike Hunt nah you get highway to hell ac/dc
Can Mike Hunt report to the office
Holy Christ-when Eddle comes in with the arpeggio riffs section it's just smokin'! It totally transcends the quality of the recording almost---the master and his tone! Love it. It's still hitting me hard--we all miss you EVH------RIP!
I first heard this bootleg about 20 years ago. It totally captures his tone.
refrain from taking the Lord God's name in vain....
Ed had his sound together. His Marshalls sound great... just turn `em up
Man.....the guitar tone was already sounding amazing!!! Thank you for posting!!! 🎸🎸🎸
Peter Cast
I did not expect a fast-ass-beautiful-solo
That stood right out to me as well.
Peter Cast
I thought the guitar sounded forced and the tone sucked.
There's stuff out there where Eddie recorded himself at like 14, and he was already fantastic.
KeckArmy : 🤦♂️
In 1969-1970 Us Heavies from PHS used to hang out at Victory Park on the Mound in Pasadena (right below the tennis courts). Alex VH would hang with us and we would drink Red Mountain wine and groove. Eddie was too young and stayed at home. My girlfriend at the time Soo N. broke up with me to start dating little Edward. I miss those crazy days. Hope everyone survived.
I still recall hearing this and then yelling "Mom I need to buy an electric guitar like now!!"
It was sounding like a hot mess until that guitar tone came alive.
Mike Patton : that solo blows!
I know right? That first slide into those first few chords-. Fucking MONSTER tone.
You don't remember how crude the technology was back then. Raw. It's garage.
Mike Btrfld
This isn't about the mix. Any good musician can hear that the Alex and Mike weren't together at all and then Eddie comes in and locks that shit down. But this is their very early days, and of course, they eventually got it together to be a super tight band.
Doug Davis
It wasn't Ed's cleanest but it's still light years ahead of what anyone else was doing at the time.
And I like that the solo is twice as long as what was on the record.
Wish I had a time machine...this as close as we.can get...thanks
Nothing like listening to these early recordings to conform the true talent behind the success.
This is a great comment.
Slow it down to .75 it sound about right.. you are welcome.
So the recording quality sucks; the drums sound like crap and there's hardly any vocal. But there's clearly so much more polish to their sound and the composition than 99% of bands playing clubs today.
Are there any bands still playing in clubs? Thought it's all shit hop and crap now.
I would literally give up ten years of my life to relive 76 to79.
Last ethical president. Maybe you're onto something.
You probably already did.
@@napsahtava HAHAHAHAHAHA You just called Jimmy Carter "ethical". Lmmfao that's a hoot!
@@basedbear1605 Carter is only president we've had who's been right about Israel, for starters. And compared to Reagan, he was a saint.
@@napsahtava Being right about Israel doesn't give him ethics. And comparing to others isn't what gives you ethics, either. There hasn't been a leader of a country in the history of the world who has been ethical. It's literally impossible to get to that level of power without being ethically compromised. But you keep on living in la la land, bud. Drink that kool-aid.
Wow! Pictures look like Eds early attempts to put a humbucker in a strat. The mighty Van Halen!!
Router out the bridge slot and place the humbucker at a 17 degree angel
“Router out”? Bahahahaha!!!!
This sounds like what it is posted as.
Small club with a Marshall for Eddie, distorted bass amp for Michael Anthony that didn't have enough power, Alex on basic drum kit, and David Lee Roth flubbing words.
It was the 70's. How did this happen?
Someone must have spiked the party punch. I can't imagine that this young rock band was intentionally intoxicated.
This is great stuff actually.
Rock gods that is all I am saying 61 years old I grew up with these guys.
Gotta love ol Dave still screwing up the lyrics! Perhaps he was still refining them in 76...
everything is different. that drum intro is annoying. the guit rhythm is off. yeah, all of it needed refining.
I fergot the fukin words, man!
Those were probably the original lyrics before they were rewritten for the record.
Hindsight... This wudda been the time to fire the fairy boy and get a real singer
@@earlcampbell8927 oh be real. Roth was the best rock frontman for any touring rock band from '79 to '84, and at the time, about five years was all a band like this could expect.
Love the pics of EVH playing a Strat!
you know that the white with black stripes guitar he's holding on VH1 is the same guitar, right?
They’re ok but not as good as Van Halen.
It's so crazy to me how this is 1976 when it sounds so out of place compared to everything else going on at the time... I never actually realized they had all these songs written in the mid-70s... and they were defining trends for the entire next decade through 92... most bands are derivative in that you can hear earlier bands in their sound, and so you know where they got their influence, but these guys are something else... like they took what was going on at that time and pushed it leaps and bounds further than most bands do...
There were lots of songs like this at the time. But those songs are of course more closer to Metal than anything.
He wrote for all residents of so cal
Totally! Doesn't sound dated now, in 2019.....yet that was 1976!? Bizarre, incredible.
It is hard to get the impact of vh and arosmith unless you lived in that time
well put
Very good, nice cut, pure raw energy.
Amazing that Edward was only about 21 in 1976 when they recorded this.
RIP Edward.
What a nice surprising treat!! Thank you!!
Gene Simmons went, "Cha-ching!". And the rest is history.
That's because Gene Simmons will do anything for a buck.
@@ceepersandenderdragonssvlo4812 So true. I own 3 Kiss air guitars. With custom strap.
@M.C. Wynn Gene Simmons once called himself in an interview "King Whore!" That should tell you all you need to know about him!
@M.C. Wynn I've also heard that he paid for VH's first recording session
My Dad use to tell me stories about seeing VH at a place called Walter Mittys Rock Emporium in Pomona California when he first started dating my mom. He told me that he use to come home and tell my mom “I don’t think those guys will ever make it out of their garage but that guitar player might do something” well I was born two week before VH album came out. My mom was listening to the radio and “Running with the Devil” came on after the song played my called my dad at work and asked home “Do you remember that band that you thought wouldn’t make it out of their garage?” My dad replied “Yes I do.” My mom told my dad “Well they have a song on the radio called Running with the Devil, I think that band is going to blow up” well all of us VH fans know how their career turned out and how great EVH was. I personally am thankful for the funny cool stories my dad use to share with me and I am grateful I caught Van Hagar in 2004 and Van Roth in 2012.
wow my parents never told me shit, maybe I was an accident
LOL at Ed's mismatched stage rig - Marshall, Randall and Orange all stacked up together
@Jim Smith Man, I know it. I used a beat Fender Twin on top of a Sears Silvertone cabinet for a while
IMHO... Dave sings the same as now lol.. amazing raw Eddie guitar with solos and fills to match.. Michael Anthony's vocals awesome.. stripped back drums from Alex.. serious GEM.. thanks for uploading.. any more for any more....??
RIP-"Thanks for reinventing the electric guitar"Frank Zappa to EDDY
I’d buy this. Oh wait I did! On 8-track, then LP, then Cassette, then CD.
And now we download and stream it. 👍🏼
hahaha me too
Except for the 8 track, me too!
That brought back some great memories! Thank you!! 😎✌
Yes it does
Guess I watched this a year ago...what a difference 44 years later does to the short term memory 🧠👴
I recently learned to play the album version, but now I have to learn to play it like this. What an incredible piece of rock history.
So did anything ever become of these guys?
@rudy kipling EDWARD BROKE UP THE BAND BY BECOMING A PRIEST.
All down hill from there..
Their opening act was Supper's Ready. Now there was a band that took America by storm.
They never made it. They went double plastic then disappeared
They caught a lucky break and became Sammy Hagar's backing band.
And in the end Michael was the voice of Van Halen. so cool.
I love michael anthonys voice and bass. But the van halen sound?
You must have some bias against Dave to make such a foolish statement.
Dont like Dave. That's ok. But i got no time in my life for such negativity.
Now pass me the bong and have a nice fat line ready for me after that
David Hoover ...I agree. This band couldn’t decide between lead singers while the real glue that held this group together was Michael Anthony.
David Hoover are ya fuckin kidding me? Dave was the man. But Michael vocals has always been the constant van halen sound. Lighten up Alice.
Eddie is half of those backing vocals...why does nobody remember that??
lgmnow kondo Ed is known for his guitar not his voice.
I found the simple life ain’t so “easy”. Let’s simplify that a bit David.
* Simplify that with "simple".
Van Halen is a national treasure...
Fun Fake Fact: Eddie originally wrote this song when he was eight years old. At that time, it was titled "Cub Scout to a Webelo".
How is that fun?
Damn I wish this was true. I run long distances with a group and we exchange trivia questions every mile. This would have been a great trivia question.
@@kernelfactory7839 How about this? The Van Halen's were a musical family from Europe. Eddie and Alex played classical music all the way across the Atlantic to pay for their fare. When they got here, their father realized there was no work for traditional musicians in America. So, he bought his sons two new instruments. Eddie originally was given a drum set by his parents, and Alex got the guitar. One day Eddie came home, and Alex was banging away on his drums, so he picked up Alex's guitar. The rest is history.
I was just a Senior in High school when this Album dropped like in the summer of 78? It blew everyone away with the songs and eruption. Every music fan was arguing what kinds of effects , Eddie used to make eruption and Eruption was the most played High School Graduation songs for years to come. This album and Panama were the best for me and then Sammy hagar dropped 5150 in 1985 and that was a musical match made in heaven!.
I have to agree with other commenters: these guys will never amount to anything. One and done garage band. Their equipment will be pawned for drinking money.
*Funny there. A friend of mine told this story. He was from an affluent family in Hollywood California. He was an Olympic hopeful swimmer but , turned to music instead by learning to play drums. Spoiled rich kids wanting to be musicians and rock stars, were gifted expensive guitars, amps, and other equipment, only to be sold at pawn shops after realizing they have no Talent.*
VH when they were pure and innocent........Sounds great.
It’s been said a hundred times already... but damn! The most envied and sought after tone on the planet - by an unheard of kid playing in a club! Unbelievable!!
That guitar tone! On point!
on point? fuck off twit.
Saw VH open for Journey on VH's first big tour as an opening band.
Must have been 1978, 1979; somewhere right in there.
After VH left the stage so, did about half the crowd. LOL
No one wanted to see Journey after that over the top performance by VH. haha
OOOHHH...now it all makes sense. Lars must have borrowed Alex’s drums for the St Anger sessions. 🤔
The only true standout in this group/ on this recording is the guitarplayer. They should have named the band after him. ;-)
it'll never work
They did name it after him. EVH
Moona101 no way!! 😂👍🏻
Maybe they can audition for American Idol.
For corporate law reasons they´d better leave off his First name, to prevent Iron Maiden´s veto!
Saw them at MSG in NY in 1981 - loudest band I ever saw! Opened with “Unchained” - blew the roof off the Garden.... girls up front taking their tops and bras off and throwing them onstage... crazy...
Paul Leeder Fair Warning...the best Van Halen album ever. In my humble opinion.
I know how they feel,I’m a janitor and have to endure the same harassment
Interesting to hear the lyrics weren't quite "finalized". Those things happen all the time. Songs get written, performed live & minor changes get made either before or while you're in the studio. It's too bad there isn't more video of these live performances.
That guitar sound as we know it comes from a small box known as a Echoplex! I held Eddie's Echoplex while it was in for service in a small repair shop in Tarzana, California 1978.
I had a old roland space echo l hated the bleed thru on it but was very cool in the early 80's
@@mikeholmes3530 I have all the old effects and processors that UAD makes in my computer. I think about 85 UAD plugins with 24 dedicated processors to run them. I have as many instances as I need of millions of dollars worth of equipment without having to pay for the originals, having to have a place to store them, and without having to maintain them. Counting VST plugins, I probably have over 500. I really like the UAD Roland Dimention D and the EMT 140. Just got the Capitol Chambers reverb. Really looking forward to singing with that.
Fuckin A
No way man
@@midi510 I have the same UAD stuff for Protools, But my EMT 140 (Yes, a real plate reverb) has some mojo the the UAD doesn't. But I would not buy one after owning the UAD. It's just I had my EMT 140 back to the days of 16 track tape.
You did WHAT?
Little baby rock stars, like newly-hatched alligators look like the adult ones only cuter for awhile.
its amazing looking back at how important it was in those days to go with friends out to a club to see the "next big group" or hear a "new sound". It was like you and your friends discovered them. So many great shows.
Man you can tell Eddie is just hungry and on fire here in his playing and Dave sounded coherent and actually with it...
Yep, they had something to prove at that point. And afterwards they went pop.
That's because they were poor, weren't on coke & it was just the 4 of them trying to make it, of course they sounded like a well oil machine. When the money, drugs, alcohol & hangers on crept in years later, that's when things got out of control and the band trying to hang on
And then he met Jack Daniels
DAN HALEN : you're a dork. One of the lamest solos ever....and he does it 3 times.
@@dougdavis8986 OK
I seriously doubt recordings like this are well documented, as far as people knew they were just another band trying to make it.
Dave said it would be on the radio soon but it is not the album version or the later live version. Sounds like it was made after they had signed their contract but before or just immediately after the recording sessions. Either way, the complete sound hadn't gelled into the live version yet.
Could possibly have been a professional attempt at getting a sound for A&R to send around to prospective labels as well?